Skip to content
  • About
    • HASTAC Scholars
    • Conferences
    • Staff
    • History of HASTAC
    • Leadership
    • Core Values
  • Go To…
    • Members
    • Groups
    • Sites
    • CORE Repository
  • Help & Support
  • Organizations
    • HC
    • ARLIS/NA
    • AUPresses
    • MLA
    • MSU
    • SAH
Register Log In
HASTAC Commons

CORE Search Results Start Search Over

  • All Deposits 0
  • HASTAC Deposits
  • “Excrement, Blood, and Flowers”: Visceral Imagery in Djuna Barnes’s "Nightwood"

    Author(s):
    John Stephenson (see profile)
    Date:
    2007
    Subject(s):
    Human body--Sociological aspects, Literature, Twentieth century, Literature, Modern
    Item Type:
    Essay
    Tag(s):
    Djuna Barnes, Body-mind, Sociology of the body, 20th-century literature, Modernist literature

  • “To Lie Beside a Leper”: Dirt, Disease, and Defilement in Rainer Maria Rilke’s "The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge"

    Author(s):
    John Stephenson (see profile)
    Date:
    2008
    Subject(s):
    German literature, Twentieth century, Civilization, Modern, Kristeva, Julia, 1941-
    Item Type:
    Essay
    Tag(s):
    20th-century German literature, Modernity, Julia Kristeva

  • “Heathens! Bloody Heathens!”: Postcolonial Gothic in "The Wicker Man"

    Author(s):
    John Stephenson (see profile)
    Date:
    2007
    Subject(s):
    Horror films, Motion pictures, Twentieth century, Paganism, History, Modern, Arts, Gothic, Folklore, Scotland
    Item Type:
    Essay
    Tag(s):
    Folk horror, Postcolonial studies, 20th-century film, Modern paganism, Gothic

  • “The Land of Matters Unforgot”: North and South, Past and Present in William Morris’s "The Earthly Paradise"

    Author(s):
    John Stephenson (see profile)
    Date:
    2008
    Subject(s):
    English poetry, Nineteenth century, British literature, British--Social life and customs
    Item Type:
    Essay
    Tag(s):
    William Morris, Hellenism, 19th-century English poetry, 19th-century British literature, 19th-century British culture

  • “Oft, In Lonely Rooms”: Wordsworth’s Self-Pleasuring "Tintern Abbey"

    Author(s):
    John Stephenson (see profile)
    Date:
    2009
    Subject(s):
    Wordsworth, William, 1770-1850, English poetry, Eighteenth century, Romanticism
    Item Type:
    Essay
    Tag(s):
    Sexuality in literature, male gaze, landscape allegory, William Wordsworth, 18th-century English poetry, Queer studies

  • “Picking Daffodils with Auntie Wordsworth”: Class, Intellect, and Virility in John Osborne’s "Look Back In Anger"

    Author(s):
    John Stephenson (see profile)
    Date:
    2009
    Subject(s):
    Drama, Great Britain, Europe--British Isles, British literature, Twentieth century, New wave films, Social classes, Masculinity
    Item Type:
    Essay
    Tag(s):
    John Osborne, Look Back In Anger, Richard Burton, Kenneth Branagh, Angry Young Men, British drama, 20th-century British literature, Class

  • “Our Wild Forest-Land”: England(s) and Love in Hawthorne’s

    Author(s):
    John Stephenson (see profile)
    Date:
    2019
    Subject(s):
    Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 1804-1864, American literature, Nineteenth century, Twentieth century, Twenty-first century, National characteristics, Nationalism, New England
    Item Type:
    Essay
    Tag(s):
    Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter, Historic England, Hawthorne, American literature after 1800, National identity

  • “Neither mickling nor muckling" Northern Reflexivity in the Novels of the British “New Wave”

    Author(s):
    John Stephenson (see profile)
    Date:
    2012
    Subject(s):
    British literature, Culture--Study and teaching, English literature, Area studies
    Item Type:
    Thesis
    Tag(s):
    20th Century Literature, Britsh New Wave, Northern England, Cultural studies, Regional studies

Viewing item 1 to 8 (of 8 items)
HUMANITIES COMMONS. BASED ON COMMONS IN A BOX.
TERMS OF SERVICE • PRIVACY POLICY • GUIDELINES FOR PARTICIPATION
This site is part of the HASTAC network on Humanities Commons. Explore other sites on this network or register to build your own.
Terms of ServicePrivacy PolicyGuidelines for Participation

@

Not recently active